Root Tip Elevators
Specialist root tip elevators — Heidbrink, Cryer, Bein, Bernard, Flohr, Kopp, Winter and more for retained root and apical fragment removal.
6222
Heidbrink Root Tip Scaler, Left, 1.5mm | ErgoDenta
6225
Heidbrink Root Tip Scaler, Left, 2.5mm | ErgoDenta
6221
Heidbrink Root Tip Scaler, Right, 1.5mm | ErgoDenta
6224
Heidbrink Root Tip Scaler, Right, 2.5mm | ErgoDenta
6220
Heidbrink Root Tip Scaler, Straight, 1.5mm | ErgoDenta
6223
Heidbrink Root Tip Scaler, Straight, 2.5mm | ErgoDenta
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About this category
Why dentists choose ErgoDenta for Root Tip Elevators
Retained roots need the right root tip elevator — not a larger luxator. Our root tip range includes the full library of specialist designs: Heidbrink, Cryer, Bein, Bernard, Flohr, Kopp and Winter patterns in the shank angulations and tip widths dentoalveolar surgeons rely on.
Tips are forged for strength, precision-ground for controlled slippage into the PDL space and hand-finished so the working edge sits exactly where the design calls for. Handles are round and cross-hatched for the rotational grip these instruments demand.
Frequently asked about Extraction
What does the forceps numbering system mean?
#150 = upper anteriors/bicuspids. #151 = lower anteriors/bicuspids. #18R / #18L = upper molars (right/left, cowhorn). #23 = lower molar cowhorn. #88R/L = upper molar (split-beak).
Cryer vs Apexo elevator — when?
Cryer (right/left) for removing root tips on the side adjacent to the empty socket. Apexo (straight, fine) for periotome-style atraumatic extraction. Both in our Elevators sub-category.
Do you sell pediatric forceps?
Yes — paediatric upper and lower (#150S, #151S) plus dedicated #1, #51, #69 for milk teeth. All in stainless 420.
What are luxating elevators best for?
Severing PDL fibres before forceps removal — preserves bone and dramatically reduces socket trauma. ErgoLite Luxating Elevators ship in 6 widths (1mm-5mm).